If this mod applies to the tweed e dog I'd like to try it. Excuse my ignorance, but how do I determine which is pin 5 on the ic? My tweed-e sounds good but is unusable because it picks up a crazy amount of rf.

Ok, not sure what happened to the recent updates to this thread before the outage, but I have some info since receiving my three-knob (blue case, white lettering) Blue Doo recently.It's not a BAD sounding pedal, but it's not great either. It's quite bassy and a bit 'flubby' until you turn up the tone and gain. It has a decent distortion (which picks up pretty quickly at the end of the knob rotation), almost a cross between a British & American sound when cranked up (more on that later). At lower gain, it's too dark for any articulation or finesse playing.

1) It is VERY noisy in terms of picking up radio signals.2) Apparently (as suspected) all three overdrives (Black Dog, Tweed Dog, Blue Doo) use the same circuit board, just slightly different parts here/there.3) It uses the same ICs and input cap (.1uF) as the Black Dog4) The 10uF electrolytic cap (in parallel to the 75k resistor on the LM1458) is 6.8uF on the Blue Doo

There are a couple of other cap values that I'd like to confirm, including the distortion pot, but overall, it looks like the same values (the ones marked with the asterisk) are changed depending on the model of the pedal. What's interesting is that the Blue Doo looks like a mix of values of Tweed AND the Black Dog. I'm not crazy about the sound and mainly got it to try it out and confirm parts values.I might have a Black Dog on the way too, but we'll see.

bucksears wrote:Ok, not sure what happened to the recent updates to this thread before the outage, but I have some info since receiving my three-knob (blue case, white lettering) Blue Doo recently.It's not a BAD sounding pedal, but it's not great either. It's quite bassy and a bit 'flubby' until you turn up the tone and gain. It has a decent distortion (which picks up pretty quickly at the end of the knob rotation), almost a cross between a British & American sound when cranked up (more on that later). At lower gain, it's too dark for any articulation or finesse playing.

1) It is VERY noisy in terms of picking up radio signals.2) Apparently (as suspected) all three overdrives (Black Dog, Tweed Dog, Blue Doo) use the same circuit board, just slightly different parts here/there.3) It uses the same ICs and input cap (.1uF) as the Black Dog4) The 10uF electrolytic cap (in parallel to the 75k resistor on the LM1458) is 6.8uF on the Blue Doo

There are a couple of other cap values that I'd like to confirm, including the distortion pot, but overall, it looks like the same values (the ones marked with the asterisk) are changed depending on the model of the pedal. What's interesting is that the Blue Doo looks like a mix of values of Tweed AND the Black Dog. I'm not crazy about the sound and mainly got it to try it out and confirm parts values.I might have a Black Dog on the way too, but we'll see.

Mine doesn't pick up any radio at all. I never got around to adding the tone section to mine. Mine's not bassy or flubby at all. I wonder if it's the fault of the tone section. If it was though, I would guess that turning the tone bypass switch would fix it.

Thanks for the tip, but I'm not that thrilled with it to try and fix it. It'll go on the shelf until I feel like parting with it.In other news: I now have a Black Dog on the way - only paid $25 for it, so it's not a big loss if I don't like that one either. I'm really curious as to how this one sounds.

Sorry to hijack a really old thread - hoping for some help as I have NO idea about electronics, but one of the engineers at work specialises in electronics and does soldering all of the time. I got this pedal when I was 16ish and started playing guitar and when I moved my mum, somehow, managed to "Remove" it from the house. For my 30th, she bought me an immaculate (on the outside) one from eBay. The unit has A LOT of hiss and generally and when plugged in solely to my PSB1U - getting pure whine from the amp... 9V battery, it is playable.

Sorry to ask someone to dumb this down to the easiest common denominator, but I really want this pedal on my board (probably more for nostalgia, but hey). Does anyone have advice I can pass to the engineer to reduce the hiss (which I imagine is RF) and to resolve the DC issue.

Boss power supplies tend to do that to many pedals. As do most other switched-mode power supplies. I'd suggest trying out a few different power supplies before doing anything to the pedal itself. Your symptoms are most likely due to that one power supply and it's ripple effect.

More power filter on the pedal end could help it a bit, but still. I'm fairly certain that this is only a power supply issue.

On a side note, a friend of mine was planning to sell his Belle Epoch as defect unit due to similar whine. I told him to ditch the boss supply for cheapest harley benton power plant and the whine was gone. Not saying those are particularly good power supplies either. But one has worked for me for quite some time now.+m